Friday, December 24, 2021

Iowa's second derecho in two years spawned 43 tornadoes. Here's how the storm compared to others


Philip Joens, Des Moines Register
Thu, December 23, 2021

Officials have determined at least 43 tornadoes resulted from the Dec. 15 derecho that swept across Iowa — more than seven times the total number of tornadoes to take shape in December in Iowa since 1950, and the most tornadoes in any single day in the state's historical record.

As data from last week's storm — the first December derecho in U.S. history — continues to be processed, its historic nature becomes clearer. The storm will go down as the worst late-fall or winter thunderstorm in Iowa's recorded history, said Mike Fowle, the science and operations officer at the National Weather Service in Des Moines. It could also rank as one of the worst severe thunderstorms ever recorded in Iowa, regardless of season, he said.

Between 1950 and 2020, only six tornadoes were ever recorded in December in Iowa, according to the NWS. All of them were recorded in southeastern Iowa. Of Dec. 15's 43, 17 were identified as EF2s, with wind gusts of at least 111 mph.

Iowa's previous single-day record of 35 tornadoes was set on Aug. 31, 2014. And meteorologists with the NWS say more tornadoes resulting from the Dec. 15 storm could still be confirmed.

"In the modern era, we haven't seen anything like this in at least the last 75 years," Fowle said. "This is going to be in the upper-echelon of events — anytime you talk 'historic,' you talk the top 5-10% of events."

Iowa wasn't alone in seeing action on Dec. 15: At least 92 tornadoes have been confirmed across Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin, according to the NWS. Twenty-seven were confirmed in Nebraska alone.

Meteorologists say a perfect mix created a cocktail ready to produce severe thunderstorms and tornadoes that day. Warm air from the Gulf of Mexico met a powerful low-pressure system as it raced from the central Rocky Mountains, northeast through the Plains and into the Great Lakes, said Peter Rogers, a meteorologist at the NWS in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Normally in the late fall, warm air from the Gulf of Mexico meets with cold air in the Midwest, reducing the chances for thunderstorms, according to the weather service's storm prediction center.

Des Moines and Waterloo both smashed high-temperature records on Dec. 15, too, with highs of 74 degrees, which handily beat the cities' previous records of 69 and 67 degrees, respectively. Oskaloosa, Muscatine, Iowa City and Ottumwa all set a new record high for the month in Iowa — which was 74 degrees, set on Dec. 6, 1939, in southwest Iowa's Thurman — with highs of 75 degrees.

"Warmer air can hold more moisture, and the more moisture you have available has the potential to increase the severity of storms," Rogers said. "All of that came together at a very odd time of year."

Numerous agricultural buildings sustained severe damage last week, according to damage reports. Vehicles were overturned and some houses had their roofs taken off. Numerous trees and power lines were also damaged.

A tornado hit the middle of Rudd, in the state's northeast corner, heavily damaging a church and library. The tornado that hit Aurelia, in northwest Iowa, caused the most damage out of the 10 in that corner of the state when it tipped over rail cars, collapsed a hog barn and caused other damage, Rogers said.


Cleanup at the public library in Rudd, Iowa, began on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021, after a confirmed EF-1 tornado touched down on the town of 359 residents Wednesday night, leaving multiple homes damaged. The storm was part of a band of severe weather that raked across much of Iowa Wednesday night.


But population centers like Council Bluffs, Carroll and Sioux City narrowly escaped significant damage. A tornado was confirmed in Sergeant Bluff, just south of Sioux City, and tornadoes touched down on opposite ends of Jefferson, Fowle said; a tornado also landed just west of Atlantic and another clipped a corner of Grand Junction, he said.

No fatalities or injuries were recorded from any of the touchdowns in Iowa, a fact that has astonished meteorologists, although a semitrailer driver was killed in Benton County, west of Cedar Rapids, when a non-tornadic gust of wind hit his truck and caused it to roll over. In total, five deaths were blamed on the derecho across all states.

Many of the tornadoes were narrow, which minimized the destruction, Fowle said. But there were also several long tornadoes: Four were on the ground for more than 20 miles, the longest being an EF2 tornado that hit Belmond and Meservey and was on the ground for 28 miles. Eleven were on the ground for more than 10 miles.

A tornado approaches Interstate 80 near Atlantic, Iowa, as a semi rolls eastward on Wednesday, Dec. 15, 2021. This tornado was an EF2 tornado, was on the ground for 26.1 miles had peak wind speeds of 115 to 120 mph.

"Thankfully, the footprint of these towns is fairly small," Fowle said. "In our forecast area, we pretty much missed a direct hit on any town."

Since 1950, the number of days in which tornadoes form across Iowa has diminished, State Climatologist Justin Glisan said. But days with tornado outbreaks are increasing, Glisan said.

On July 14, 26 tornadoes hit Iowa in what was, at the time, the third-largest single-day tornado outbreak since record-keeping began. Iowa had "basically a lack of severe weather" outside these two storms, Glisan said.

Thunderstorms are an important source of precipitation. Yet most of Iowa was mired in a drought for the second straight year.

"That's reflected in the drought conditions," Glisan said. "No thunderstorms. No rainfall."

Parts of eastern Iowa are still considered to be in moderate droughts.

Two derechos in two years


Forecasters expect Iowa to get hit by a derecho once every two years, Glisan said. Prior to last year's derecho, the last to hit the state was in 2014. A total of 13 derechos have been recorded in Iowa since 1980, Glisan said.

"To have derechos within two years of this intensity" is rare, he confirmed.

Last August's derecho traveled 770 miles as straight-line winds decimated crops and shattered homes in Iowa, Illinois, Ohio, Minnesota and Wisconsin. It caused more than $11.5 billion in damage. To date, it is still the most costly thunderstorm in U.S. history.

Last week's serial derecho, a type of derecho produced by thunderstorms with strong winds which bow outward, traveled at least 550 miles through Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin, Fowle said.

The 2020 derecho was a progressive derecho, a type of storm fueled by a hot and moist environment with relatively strong winds. Serial derechos typically sweep across wide and long paths. Progressive derechos are typically associated with shorter lines of thunderstorms that travel along narrower paths.

The 2020 derecho was stronger than the Dec. 15 event, producing peak wind gusts of around 140 mph. The strongest gust recorded last week was 88 mph in Audubon.

But winds not associated with thunderstorms — behind this system — were stronger, Glisan said.

"If you drew a line from the southwest corner through the northeast corner, all the tornado warnings and tornado reports were northwest of that line," he said.


There were 118 severe thunderstorm and 71 tornado warnings across Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa from a powerful thunderstorm system on Wed. Dec. 15, 2021 and Thurs. Dec. 16, 2021.

As the front moved across Iowa, it started to bow out in the southern part of the state. The tornados all happened north of that bowing and spared the southeast part of the state, Glisan said.

"Basically, the line had storm motion to the northeast, Glisan said. "You had very strong ambient large-scale winds out of the south, so you had friction along that line and that's where you get those spin-up tornadoes."



'We're seeing these conditions co-mingle'


Southeast Iowa was forecast to see above-average temperatures this winter because this is the second straight winter with a La Nina weather pattern, or a natural cooling of sea water in the Pacific Ocean. La Ninas favor warmer-than-average temperatures and below-average precipitation in the southeastern U.S., and colder-than-average temperatures and above-average precipitation in the northwest.

But as the climate warms, extreme weather is happening more often in Iowa, Glisan said. The number of days with environments conducive for making severe weather are increasing because more water vapor is available, he said.

In recent years, Iowa has seen flooding caused by higher-intensity rainfall coupled simultaneously with or in years opposite of droughts. While 2018 was the second-wettest year in 149 years of record-keeping, for example, a drought also gripped southeastern Iowa.

"We're seeing these conditions co-mingle," Glisan said.

The Dec. 15 outbreak followed another late on Dec. 10 and early on Dec. 11 that swept across Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky and Illinois and killed 91 people, according to USA TODAY. An EF4 tornado with wind speeds of 190 mph and more than a mile wide traveled on the ground for 166 miles, decimating Mayfield, Kentucky. Another EF3 tornado with winds of 160 mph in the same system was on the ground for 123 miles.

"I would greatly take these types of tornadoes (seen in Iowa on Dec. 15) versus the supercells on the Dec. 10 event," Glisan said. "Those long-track supercells are scary, scary things."

The two systems were the result of four "heat pulses" to hit the U.S. this month, according to Matthew Cappucci, a meteorologist for the Washington Post. Record highs were set in four states during the first pulse, on Dec. 1 and 2. The fourth is expected to settle across the southwest U.S. on Friday, according to Cappucci.

Friday and Saturday's highs in Des Moines, expected to be 54 and 43 degrees, respectively, would be well above the average high of 33 degrees for Dec. 24 and Dec. 25.



"It reinforces the connection between human-induced climate change and the incidence of warm temperatures in the wintertime," Cappucci wrote. "Heat extremes have outpaced cold records at a rate greater than 2 to 1 this year, and the holidays are a time of year when that warming is especially pronounced."

Eventually, Des Moines is expected to see the more typical cold and snowy weather associated with the season, Glisan said.

"February is becoming the problem child month," Glisan said. "We get those cold-air outbreaks, but also higher snow potential."

This article originally appeared on Des Moines Register: 43 Iowa tornadoes confirmed from 'historic' December derecho, NWS says
Texas governor doesn't pardon George Floyd after parole board withdraws recommendation


Rebecca Falconer
AXIOS
Thu, December 23, 2021

George Floyd will not be posthumously pardoned for a 2004 Houston drug charge because the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles withdrew its recommendation, the Dallas Morning News first reported Thursday.

Driving the news: The board had recommended a full pardon for Floyd for the charge, for which he served 10 months in prison. A spokesperson for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) told the Morning News that recommendation "contained procedural errors" and said there had been a "lack of compliance with Board rules."

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"As a result of the Board's withdrawal of the recommendation concerning George Floyd, Governor Abbott did not have the opportunity to consider it," the spokesperson added.

The big picture: Floyd, whose murder by a former Minneapolis police officer sparked global anti-racism protests last year, was arrested during a Houston police sting operation for selling $10 worth of crack, per AP.

The officer who arrested him, Gerald Goines, is facing two murder charges and has been accused of lying to justify warrants over a 2019 drug raid.

The Harris County Public Defender's office alleged Goines fabricated a confidential informant in Floyd's case.

What they're saying: Allison Mathis, a Houston public defender who applied for a posthumous pardon for Floyd, told the Morning News the recommendation withdrawal was "outrageous."

"Greg Abbott and his political appointees have let their politics triumph over the right thing to do and what is clearly is justice," Mathis said.

"I expected an up or a down vote. I did not expect this kind of misconduct."


Texas board withdraws pardon recommendation for George Floyd

E- A button that reads "I can't breathe," adorns the jacket of a mourner before the funeral for George Floyd on Tuesday, June 9, 2020, in Houston. Political observers are watching whether Texas' governor will posthumously pardon Floyd for a 2004 arrest before the end of the year.
 (Godofredo A. Vásquez/Houston Chronicle via AP, Pool, File)More

PAUL J. WEBER
Thu, December 23, 2021

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A Texas board that had unanimously supported a posthumous pardon for George Floyd over a 2004 drug arrest in Houston backpedaled in an announcement Thursday, saying “procedural errors" were found in their recommendation months after leaving the decision to Republican Gov. Greg Abbott.

The unusual reversal was announced by Abbott's office two days before Christmas, around the time he typically doles out his annual pardons.

The withdrawn endorsement was met with outrage from a public defender who submitted the pardon application for Floyd, who spent much of his life in Houston before his death in 2020 under the knee of a white Minneapolis police officer. Allison Mathis, an attorney in Houston, accused the two-term governor of playing politics ahead of Texas' March GOP primary elections as he faces challengers from the far right.

Floyd's name was withdrawn along with two dozen other clemency recommendations that had been submitted by the Texas Board of Pardon and Paroles. In a letter dated Dec. 16 but not released publicly until now, the board told Abbott that it had identified “unexplained departures” from its process of issuing pardons and needed to reconsider more than a third of the 67 clemency recommendations it sent to Abbott this year, including the one for Floyd.
 


In October, the board had unanimously recommended that Floyd become just the second person in Texas since 2010 to receive a posthumous pardon from the governor.

“As a result of the Board’s withdrawal of the recommendation concerning George Floyd, Governor Abbott did not have the opportunity to consider it,” Abbott spokeswoman Renae Eze said in a statement.

Mathis called the last-minute reversal a “ridiculous farce." She said the board — which is stocked with Abbott appointees — did not make her aware of any issues prior to the announcement from the governor's office.

“It really strains credibility for them to say now that it's out of compliance, after the board has already voted on it,” she said.

Floyd grew up and was laid to rest in Houston. In June, former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin was sentenced to 22 1/2 years in prison for Floyd's murder, which led to a national reckoning in the U.S. over race and policing.

Pardons restore the rights of the convicted and forgive them in the eyes of the law. But in Floyd’s case, his family and supporters said a posthumous pardon in Texas would show a commitment to accountability.

In February 2004, Floyd was arrested in Houston for selling $10 worth of crack in a police sting, and later pleaded guilty to a drug charge and served 10 months in prison. But the global spotlight on the death of Floyd in police custody 16 years later is not why prosecutors revisited his Houston case. Instead, it was prompted by a deadly Houston drug raid in 2019 that involved the same officer who arrested Floyd.

Prosecutors say that officer, Gerald Goines, lied to obtain the search warrant for the raid that killed a husband and wife. Goines, who is no longer on the Houston force and faces murder charges, has denied wrongdoing. More than 160 drug convictions tied to him over the years have since been dismissed by prosecutors due to concerns about his casework.

David Gutierrez, chairman of Texas' parole board, said in the letter to Abbott that he ordered a review after the board had recommended more clemency recommendations this year than at any point in two decades. He did not specify how Floyd's recommendation skirted the usual procedures, instead only broadly pointing to several sets of rules that Gutierrez said the board did not follow.

A number listed for Gutierrez was not answered Thursday.

For months, Abbott gave no indication whether he would grant the pardon in the months since the parole board put the recommendation on his desk. The prolonged silence raised questions by Mathis and others over whether political calculations were at play in Abbott's decision. His office has not respond to those charges.

Abbott attended Floyd's memorial service last year in Houston, where he met with the family and floated the idea of a "George Floyd Act" that would take aim at police brutality. But when the Texas Legislature convened months later, Abbott was silent over policing reforms pushed by Democrats and made police funding a priority.
___

Find AP’s full coverage of the death of George Floyd at: https://apnews.com/hub/death-of-george-floyd
People Are Sharing Their Jobs And Exact Salaries, And It's Super Eye-Opening


Wed, December 22, 2021

Last week, I wrote a post about people sharing their job titles and exact salaries. I love the transparency of it all, and so did our BuzzFeed Community. Commenters came through and shared their own jobs and salaries.

Jamie Grill / Getty Images/Tetra images RF


So...here's what people said:

1.Travel Nurse:

"I make $120 to $150/hr. When I was a staff nurse, my pay was $35 to $38/hr.

anthonymarquez222

2.Heavy Haul Truck Driver:

"I haul wind turbines, aircraft wings, engines. I made $847,689.23 so far this year. After taxes, fuel permits, and escorts, this year I take home $326,000 more or less."

marquianlackland


Blake Little / Getty Images

3.Change Management Consultant:

"3+ yrs of relevant but not exact prior experience at Big Four firm: $75,000."

alliewolf67

4.Clinical Counselor at an Immigration Shelter:

"I'm making about $57,000 a year, but currently have hazard pay, so I'm at 67,000 at the moment."

allysonflores

5.Registered Nurse in Trauma Operating Room:

"We get all the car accident, gun shot, and stab wounds. I make $110,000 a year. It can be a little hectic but i love helping others, and it’s fascinating watching/assisting a surgeon save someone’s life!"

paulakristine


Sam Edwards / Getty Images

6.Data Analyst/Statistician at a Finance Company:

"I make about $95,000 base and $15,000 bonus at a large company."

millennialnerd10

7.Art Designer:

"I went to art school, and my whole family was like, 'What are you gonna do with that degree?' I’m a designer for a top media company and make $120,000 a year, full benefits, a ton of paid time off, and a plethora of perks. Support your artist family members!"

creativelyj

8.Life Insurance Agent:

"$80,000 to $100,000, first year. Residual income around $10,000 to $15,000 per month after 10 years if you’re average."

daltonbeam

9.Fundraising Director at a Small Nonprofit:

"I make $48,000 a year with no benefits."

zucchiniomelette

10.Social Worker:

"I chose the wrong career — $41,000 a year for a social worker with a master's degree."

chiromommy2130

11.Volleyball Coach:

"I’ve been coaching for about 5 years and coach multiple high-level teams and make the cost for one player's season, per team (about $2,000) from December to May. This includes two practices a week, per team, and tournaments at least every other weekend. I also do private lessons and make from $30-75/hour, depending on the amount of people I’m training. The pay isn’t great, but it’s something I’m extremely passionate about."

kumiho


Fatcamera / Getty Images

12.Online Course Builder:

"I make $65,000 a year."

dylanscottl

13.Engineering Documentation:

"I'm not an engineer, but I do all the documentation in the engineering department at my job. I make $71,500 a year."

sothias

14.Marketing Specialist:

"Mid-Missouri, rural area, marketing specialist of 3 years. $36,000."

cassjbruce

15.Medical Assistant:

"Worked as an MA for a family practice in Utah. After tax and benefits, I made just over $20,000 a year. I left for a call center and make almost $37,000 a year. My degree and student loans are worthless."

esamor


Luis Alvarez / Getty Images

16.Public Relations Advisor for Oil and Gas Industry:

"Gross $81,000/year, plus about $12,000 in annual bonus, full benefits, and 401k match."

lrc111111

17.Elementary School Teacher:

"I make $48,000. Severely underpaid for what we deal with."

kenta42e4995b4

18.Office Manager for Utility Company:

"$65,000 a year."

anlha

19.Retail Pharmacist:

"Base pay is $118,000/year, but I have the option of picking up extra shifts for overtime. Last year, with overtime I earned $125,000."


Ariel Skelley / Getty Images

20.Athletic Trainer in a Health System:

"$55,000 a year."

hillarywillson

21.Biology Teacher:

"$48,000 in Mississippi."

alliewolf67

So, now it's your turn (if you feel comfortable)! Let me know in the comments below what your job title is and how much money you make doing so.

Responses edited for length/clarity.
How power companies make it hard to save with solar

Lewis Jennings
Thu, December 23, 2021

Lewis Jennings

High energy bills are a persistent monthly burden for everyone, but they weigh especially heavily on disadvantaged communities. Between recent utility rate increases and volatile natural gas prices, the financial drain on already challenged household budgets shows no sign of easing.

To lower costs and take control of their own energy consumption, some members of minority and low- to moderate-income communities have turned to solar power. However, the state’s monopoly utilities are leading an attack on this cost-saving energy option by pushing for unfair changes to the state’s solar net metering policies.

Net metering is a billing system that allows homeowners who have installed solar to send any extra power their panels produce back to the energy grid, in exchange for credits that lower their bills. This fair system benefits both homeowners and utilities by letting homeowners cut down on energy costs and utilities resell the excess power for a profit.

Unfortunately, big utilities are bent on furthering their monopolies and expanding their record-breaking profits even more – all at the expense of consumers. They are pushing the Florida Legislature to essentially do away with net metering and the benefits it brings to homeowners.

They also have a history of using front-line communities and people of color to shield their greedy intentions, going so far as claiming that net metering actually increases these groups’ utility rates.

This simply isn’t the case. Solar homeowners make investments in solar themselves and provide power that adds a net benefit to the energy grid. This reduces costs for everyone, and that’s especially important for disadvantaged customers suffering under skyrocketing energy costs.

Power companies have a history of profiting off low-income and minority communities. They recently pushed for rate increases that will add up to billions of dollars over the next few years, and customers will be socked with the bill. The worst effects will be felt by poor communities, where too many residents already live without consistent access to electricity.

Utilities already left these vulnerable groups in the dark during the COVID-19 pandemic. They shut the lights and air conditioning off on over 500,000 Floridians at the height of the public health and economic crisis. While too many of our neighbors struggled to pay their utility bills, they brought in record earnings in 2020.

Power companies’ attack on home-based solar energy demonstrates their continued insistence that their customers rely on outdated, dangerous sources of energy that put Florida closer to the devastating consequences of climate change. That poses an even greater threat to minorities and disadvantaged communities, as they will experience the first and worst damage from the warming climate.

For the sake of these vulnerable communities, Florida must ensure that important clean energy policies are preserved and advanced. The Legislature should stop this unfair, unwanted attack on net metering and the Florida communities who benefit from it.

Lewis Jennings serves as the Environmental & Climate Justice Chair for the NAACP Florida State Conference. This column is part of “The Invading Sea” series of the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a collaborative of news organizations focusing on the threats posed by the warming climate.

This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Utility push-back on solar power users unfair to disadvantaged

PG&E may slash credits to homes with excess solar power. Where do MID and TID stand?


John Holland, Dale Kasler
Thu, December 23, 2021

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. seeks to cut by about half its payments for surplus power from solar panels on homes.

The proposal would affect Stanislaus County residents who don’t get electricity from the Modesto or Turlock irrigation districts. It would apply in most of San Joaquin and Merced counties and all of Tuolumne and its mountain neighbors.

The solar industry blasted the plan, released Dec. 13 by the California Public Utilities Commission. Critics say it would hamper the state’s effort to reduce the emissions behind climate change.

The appointed commission plans to vote on the staff proposal Jan. 27. It would apply to the three major investor-owned utilities in California: PG&E, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric.

These companies argue that the solar industry has matured enough to allow much smaller credits each month for surplus power. They also say nonsolar customers pay more because of the breaks for the panel owners.

The solar defenders include Alex Williams, a founding partner with Solar Energy Partners, a Turlock-based company that helps homeowners arrange for panels.

“By shifting the economics so drastically in the direction of the utility, it essentially eliminates the benefit the customers currently receive from choosing to go solar,” Williams said in an email to The Modesto Bee. “If California is going to reach the (climate) goals and targets set forth in SB 100, then we have to do it together and there has to be a sharing of benefits between all stakeholders.”

The changes would not apply to the 200,000-plus customers served by MID and TID, because they are not under PUC oversight. Their elected boards set their own policies for crediting surplus solar power.

MID pays 7.6 cents per kilowatt-hour for output that exceeds a solar customer’s own needs, Public Affairs Specialist Samantha Wookey said by email. The district serves part of Stanislaus County and a few areas in San Joaquin.

TID’s rate averages about 5 cents per kilowatt-hour, Communications Division Manager Constance Anderson said by email. The figure varies monthly with the overall power market.

PUC plan would affect 1.3 million

The PUC staff released the plan for investor-owned utilities after more than a year of study. It would affect about 1.3 million rooftop solar customers.

The staff said the current system generates an overly generous subsidy, worth a combined $3 billion a year, that helps mostly upper-income homeowners.

By contrast, the commission said the new pricing system will help California’s power grid cope with its most pressing need: the summertime demand for electricity after the sun goes down and solar generation fades. California endured two nights of rolling blackouts in August 2020 and narrowly avoided blackouts during a July heat wave.

Martha Guzman Aceves, the PUC commissioner who’s tracking the issue most closely, said the staff’s plan includes rebates for existing solar customers to purchase battery-storage units, which can cost several thousand dollars.

Aceves said the state wants the solar industry to keep growing but “it needs to evolve to what the grid really needs, and that involves storage.” The rebates would come to $3,200 apiece under the commission’s plan.

Subsidies have helped solar spread

The plan likely would scramble the economics of solar energy, which accounts for 25% of the state’s energy use in daytime. Rooftop solar costs about $20,000 to install, and the subsidized rate has helped popularize the technology.

PG&E’s solar customers, for example, currently get an average of more than 20 cents for every kilowatt-hour they don’t use and deliver to the grid. The new rate would be based on a complicated “time of use” system and would amount to 10 cents or less for many PG&E customers, Aceves said.

The state’s largest utility, PG&E called the proposal “a step in the right direction to modernize California’s outdated rooftop solar program.”

Advocates for solar energy said reducing the credits would slow the adoption of a renewable energy source that has become a key element in California’s battle against climate change.

“The only winners today are the utilities, which will make more profits at the expense of their ratepayers,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association, in a prepared statement. “We urge Gov. Newsom to act quickly to change this decision — at risk are 65,000 solar jobs, the security of our electricity grid, and the health of California residents and our planet.”
Homes face a monthly grid charge

Not only would the subsidy fall, but solar customers would pay considerably more during those hours when they’re drawing electricity from the grid. They also would have to begin paying the utilities a “grid participation charge” to connect to the power grid.

The grid charge would phase in over four years, to an average of $40 a month for the average solar customer. Aceves said the fee is needed to help pay for programs for low-income customers.

The big utilities, as well as some consumer advocacy groups, have been pushing the state for more than a year to reduce the credit they pay solar customers for excess power. PG&E says its fee of more than 20 cents is considerably more than the true cost of solar.

PG&E officials say the subsidy gets lumped onto the backs of nonsolar customers, who tend to have lower incomes, to the tune of $170 a year in higher bills.

Solar advocates, however, say the rooftop panels aren’t limited to the wealthy. A study by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory said “solar adoption skews toward high-income households,” but added that 42% of installations in California in 2019 were at households with less than $100,000 in annual income.

“Solar right now is increasingly affordable for low- and moderate-income families,” said Bernadette Del Chiarro, head of the California Solar and Storage Association.” The commission’s plan “is going to put it out of reach for working and middle-class families.”

And she said the “grid participation charge,” which would total $480 a year for most customers, would further damage the attractiveness of solar. “It’s going to be pretty hard to make a solar system pay for itself,” she said.
$600 million for lower-income people

The commission’s plan includes the creation of a $600 million “equity fund” to help disadvantaged families. But Del Chiarro said that won’t be nearly big enough.

The plan wouldn’t change solar economics overnight. Customers without solar would have another four months to install rooftop panels and qualify for the current rates, and existing customers would have a “glide path” of several years to transition to the system.

The California Legislature mandated the subsidies in 1995, when solar was in its infancy. Even as the industry has grown, attempts to tweak the credits have aroused controversy.


Rooftop solar in Modesto, Calif.
US became 'arrogant' after fall of Soviet Union: Gorbachev


Gorbachev resigned as president of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991, days after the leaders of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine said the USSR no longer existed (AFP/VITALY ARMAND)


Fri, December 24, 2021, 

The United States grew "arrogant and self-confident" after the collapse of the Soviet Union, leading to the expansion of the NATO military alliance, former leader Mikhail Gorbachev said on Friday.

In recent years President Vladimir Putin has grown increasingly insistent that NATO is encroaching close to Russia's borders, and Moscow last week demanded "legal guarantees" that the US-led alliance halt its eastward expansion.

Gorbachev resigned as president of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991, days after the leaders of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine said the USSR no longer existed.

"How can one count on equal relations with the United States and the West in such a position," Gorbachev told state news agency RIA Novosti on the eve of the anniversary of his resignation as the leader of the USSR.

He said there was a "triumphant mood in the West, especially in the United States" after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.

"They grew arrogant and self-confident. They declared victory in the Cold War," said the 90-year-old.

He insisted Moscow and Washington were "together" in pulling the world out of confrontation and the nuclear race.

"No, the 'winners' decided to build a new empire. Hence the idea of NATO expansion," Gorbachev added.

However, he welcomed forthcoming security talks between Moscow and Washington.

"I hope there will be a result," he said.

Last week Moscow presented the West with sweeping security demands, saying NATO must not admit new members and seeking to bar the US from establishing new bases in former Soviet countries.

Putin said Thursday that Washington had been willing to discuss the proposals and talks could happen at the start of next year in Geneva.

A senior US official said Washington was ready for talks "as soon as early January".

Putin, a former KGB agent and loyal servant of the Soviet Union, was dismayed when it fell apart, once calling the collapse "the greatest geopolitical disaster of the 20th century".

Many Russians remember the end of the Soviet era for the economic and political crisis that followed and credit Putin with returning the country to the international arena.

Valentina Shmeleva labelled the leaders immediately preceding Putin as "traitors", particularly Russia's first president Boris Yeltsin.

"Gorbachev destroyed the Soviet Union and the drunkard Yeltsin helped," said the 84-year-old.

Evgeny Dotsenko, 46, said it was a "pity" that the USSR fell apart.

"I was born and grew up in the Soviet Union and I liked living then. Everything was free: education, medicine, everything," Dotsenko, who works as a metro electrician, told AFP.

bur-acl/as/jxb

Putin Loses His Cool When Confronted Over Ukraine, Claims It Belongs to Lenin Anyway

Allison Quinn
Thu, December 23, 2021

Reuters

Vladimir Putin’s normally predictable annual press conference briefly veered off the rails Thursday when the Russian president appeared to lose his cool after being questioned about Moscow’s aggression in Ukraine.

When a reporter for Sky News asked whether Moscow could give security guarantees and promise not to invade its neighbor, Putin exploded: “You are demanding guarantees from us? It’s you who should give us guarantees. Immediately. Right now. And not talk it over for decades.”

His comments came as Ukraine released satellite images it said showed more Russian forces building up at its border, and the Russian Defense Ministry announced massive “attack” drills in Crimea.


Moscow has repeatedly claimed the moves are in response to what it sees as the threat of an expanding NATO, while Western officials view the Kremlin’s saber-rattling as a form of coercive diplomacy through which it hopes to keep its grip on Ukraine.

Putin repeatedly portrayed Russia as the victim at his press conference, claiming Moscow had been dragged into the Ukraine conflict when it is really just a “mediator.”

“They want to make us a party to the conflict, and it’s not like that,” he said. (Apparently in his view it was not the Russian forces seizing Crimea in 2014, the years of Kremlin propaganda, Russian support for separatists, and the reported weapons supplies that made Russia a party to the conflict.)

He accused NATO of being the true aggressor, appearing to briefly seethe as he suggested the West has always sought to destroy Russia.

“They tricked us. Just cheated us. Five waves of NATO enlargement,” he said.

“And on top of that—no matter what we did, you always expressed ‘concerns.’ Get out of here with your ‘concerns.’ We will do what we consider necessary. We want to ensure our safety,” he said.

Later in the conference, Putin said there was an overall “positive response” from the U.S. to the Kremlin’s “red line” proposals on NATO.

“Our American partners say they’re ready to start discussions early next year in Geneva. Both sides have named representatives and I hope that things will continue along the same path,” he said.

“Our actions will depend on the situation in the sphere of security. We made clear that the further expansion of NATO in the East is not acceptable. We’re not the ones who came to the States with missiles. They’re the ones setting up missiles right on our doorstep,” he said.

“And what if we set up missiles on the border of the U.S. and Canada? Or Mexico?”

Visibly angry, he went on to vent frustration over the idea of a sovereign Ukraine, suggesting the country actually belongs to Vladimir Lenin.

“And who did California belong to?” he asked, apparently referring to California being part of Mexico prior to the Mexican-American War.

“And Texas? Did they forget that or something? Well okay, everyone has forgotten, and they don’t remember the way they now remember about Crimea. We also don’t remember who created Ukraine–Lenin Vladimir Ilyich, when he created the Soviet Union.”

Read more at The Daily Beast.
Moscow court fines Google nearly $100 million for failing to delete 'illegal' content
Fri, 24 December 2021


A Moscow court slapped Google with an unprecedented hefty fine of nearly $100 million on Friday as Russia ramps up its pressure on foreign tech giants.

Moscow has piled fines on the world's biggest internet platforms, accusing them of not moderating their content properly and interfering in the country's affairs.

But so far fines on Facebook parent company Meta, Twitter, and Google have stretched into the tens of millions of rubles, not billions.

However on Friday a Moscow court fined Google a record 7.2 billion rubles, ($98 million, 86 million euros), the court's press service said on Telegram, for repeatedly failing to delete illegal content.

The content was not specified, but Russia regularly takes legal action for not removing content it labels illegal, such as pornographic material or posts condoning drugs and suicide.

"We'll study the court documents and then decide on next steps," Google's press service told AFP.

Interfax news agency said that the massive fine was calculated as a percentage of Google's annual earnings and was the maximum penalty for a repeated violation.

Meta -- which has a hearing in court later today on the same charges -- has also been threatened with a revenue-based fine.

On Thursday, Twitter was handed its latest fine of three million rubles ($40,000) after authorities started throttling its services in the spring.

In the past few years, the Russian government has used the pretext of protecting minors and fighting extremism to control the Russian segment of the web and began developing a so-called sovereign internet.
Fines and threats

Ahead of parliamentary elections in September, Russia's media watchdog blocked dozes of websites linked to jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, whose organisations have been banned in Russia as "extremist".

The regulator also ordered Google and Apple to remove an app dedicated to Navalny's "Smart Voting" campaign which advised supporters who to vote for to unseat Kremlin-aligned politicians.

The Silicon Valley giants complied, with sources telling AFP the decisions came after authorities threatened to arrest local staff.

>> Kremlin critic Navalny’s allies blast Apple and Google for removal of opposition voting app

Russia's media regulator has also blocked dozens of websites linked to Navalny.

Earlier, during protests in January in support of Navalny, authorities accused platforms including Google's YouTube and Twitter of meddling in Russia's domestic affairs by not deleting posts calling for people to join the rallies.

President Vladimir Putin that same month complained that large technology companies were competing with states.

Russia has already blocked a number of websites that have refused to cooperate with authorities, such as the video platform Dailymotion and LinkedIn.

As part of broad efforts to bend foreign tech under its control, Russia in September banned six major VPN providers including Nord VPN and Express VPN.

Russia also introduced a new law demanding that smartphones, computers and other gadgets sold in the country come with pre-installed domestic software and apps.

Russia's opposition accuses the Kremlin of using such regulations to further stifle freedom of speech and clamp down on online dissent.

(AFP)
Argentina battling Patagonian forest fires


Smoke from a fire in Paraje Villegas, Rio Negro province 
(AFP/Francisco RAMOS MEJIA)

Fri, December 24, 2021

Some 250 firefighters and national park employees battled blazes Friday in Argentina's Patagonia region which have destroyed thousands of hectares of forest, authorities said.

Fires are raging in high-altitude, little populated forest areas of the southern provinces of Rio Negro, Chubut and Neuquen.

Some are as much as 300 kilometers (200 miles) apart. No casualties have been reported, and no evacuations ordered.

Argentina's environment ministry said the firefighting effort was complicated by difficult terrain, distances between blazes, wind, high temperatures and dry vegetation in the midst of a drought.

Fires in the Patagonian summer are a common occurrence.

Last year, tens of thousands of hectares of forest were destroyed in fires in Argentina.
Senegal railway opening overshadowed by compensation protest





Workers at the TER control centre in Colobane. The system has undergone weeks of testing ahead of Monday's inauguration (AFP/SEYLLOU)

Malick Rokhy BA
Fri, December 24, 2021,

After five years' work and at a cost of more than a billion dollars, Senegal's capital city next Monday will finally welcome a new commuter railway line.

Politicians are lining up to extol the benefits of slashing journey times and decongesting Dakar once the gleaming TER regional express trains start to roll.

But thousands of residents claim they have not been properly compensated for homes and businesses that were demolished to make way for the much-trumpeted line.


"We plan to block the start of the TER on the day of the inauguration to demand satisfaction for our grievances," said Ibrahima Cisse, who leads a group of some 16,000 people who say they are owed money.

Many are also furious that the rehousing they were promised has not yet been completed.

The government says that almost everyone who is owed compensation has received it, but accepts that some resettlements have not yet happened.

- 'Record-breaking' works -

Travelling at up 160 kilometres (100 miles) per hour, the trains will ply the 36-kilometre (22-mile) route between Dakar and the new city of Diamniadio in about 20 minutes.

Supporters of the project say it will carry 115,000 people per day, saving them hours otherwise spent in the capital's monstrous traffic jams.

The time it took to build "may seem long, but we have broken records for the speed of construction, and despite Covid," Stephane Volant of Seter, the railway's operating company, told AFP.

Critics say the true cost of the project is more than a thousand trillion CFA francs ($1.7 billion 1.5 billion euros), compared with its budget of 780 billion francs.

Seter will use 15 four-car dual-mode trains with diesel and electric power, built by Alstom, one of several French companies, including Seter, that have had a leading role in the project.

Tickets for the Dakar-Diamniadio stretch will cost 1,500 CFA francs ($2.5) in second class, and 2,500 francs ($4.3) in first.

The railway line, which is owned by the Senegalese state, is a centre piece of President Macky Sall's plan to overhaul the nation's infrastructure by 2035.

Improving the situation in Dakar is one of Sall's pet themes.

The city's five million inhabitants make up almost one-third of Senegal's population and account for nearly all of the country's economic activity.

Traffic jams cost the city the equivalent of $172 million per year, according to official figures.

The TER stations will hook up with express buses which will operate on reserved lanes on a toll highway that has been operating for the last decade.

In the project's second phase, the line will be extended another 19 kms to the Blaise Diagne International Airport, which opened in 2017. Travel time to downtown Dakar from the airport would take less than 50 minutes.

- 'Living dead' -

Behind these impressive figures, those battling for compensation say their lives have been wrecked by the train line.

"The TER has impoverished us. It's a project that has created the living dead," said Amina Bayo, a member of Cisse's campaign group, called the Collective of People Affected by the TER.

Some 2,000 individuals and businesses have filed complaints with Apix, the state-owned agency that has overseen the project, claiming 50 billion CFA francs ($86 million/76 million euros).

They say that in many cases, assessors badly under-valued their property.

But Yatma Dieye of Apix told AFP that "98.8 percent of people affected by the project have been compensated."

"Payments began in February 2017. Everything was transparent and done according to international standards," he said.

But he conceded that the state was "still working" on resettlement, a point that can be seen clearly in one Dakar suburb intended to house the evicted.

Unfinished market stalls with electric wires hanging down to the ground sit in a stretch of weeds near a disused lot close to a motorway.

"The construction site was supposed to be completed in April 2018 for more than 2,000 evicted traders," said one of them, Ngagne Amar.

Many compensation claimants face an uphill battle, especially those lacking documentation.

Dieye said much of the evidence received by Apix "was generally weak."

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Flying squirrels found living on University of Nebraska campus

Dec. 23 (UPI) -- A crew working to cut down a dying oak tree on the University of Nebraska's East Campus made an unexpected discovery in a hollow limb -- a family of flying squirrels.

Brian Dieterman, assistant manager for the university's landscape services, said his crew was baffled when a creature poked its head out from a hole in a hollow limb of the tree.

"We're used to seeing squirrels in trees, but this didn't look like a squirrel," Dieterman told the Lincoln Journal Star.

Dieterman said the workers figured out what animals they were dealing with when they started gliding to a nearby tree.

The university shared a video to Facebook showing the flying squirrels in flight.

Larkin Powell, a professor of conservation biology at the school, said Nebraska's last-known population of flying squirrels is about 90 miles away in the area around Indian Cave State Park.

Powell said it's hard to say how long the gliding mammals have been on campus, as they are nocturnal and notoriously elusive.

"It's among the species that's harder to document because they're not out when people are around," he said. "And they're little dudes."

Powell said there haven't been any reported sightings between the animals' natural habitat and Lincoln, and it would have been difficult for them to make the journey on their own. He said they may have hitched a ride on a truck or with someone's camping supplies.

"As a biologist, I've seen crazy things that animals can do. But it's very unlikely they made it here on their own," he said.


 

Postcards from Yosemite and beyond: Winter snowfall blankets the Sierra

·4 min read
A dusting of snow covers the trees and Half Dome seen in the distance in Yosemite Valley
A dusting of snow covers the trees and Half Dome, seen from Yosemite Valley. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

After nearly two years of focusing on COVID-19 and working inside 13 different hospitals for the Los Angeles Times, it was finally time to go outside, away from crowds, and take a break from the pandemic.

First stop: the General Grant Tree in snow — sometimes called the nation's Christmas tree — located in Grant Grove in Kings Canyon National Park.

I was attempting to make my way to General Sherman and other sequoias affected by the KNP Complex fire, but the road between Sequoia National Park and Kings Canyon National Park remains closed due to inclement weather.

Rays of sunlight shine through a grove of majestic sequoia trees on snow-covered ground.
A snow-covered Grant Grove in Kings Canyon National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
The trunk of a massive sequoia dwarfs surrounding trees as it rises from snow-covered ground.
The General Grant tree in Kings Canyon National Park is the world's second-largest by trunk volume. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Bright green moss is contrasted by ice on a sequoia.
Bright green moss is contrasted by ice on a sequoia. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

General Grant did not disappoint. The tree is about 268 feet high, and the circumference of the trunk is 107 feet, second in size only to General Sherman.

The crowd was minimal and the path slow due to ice, allowing me to focus both on the details of the icicles dripping from moss and the giant Sequoia in the snow.

Yosemite took my breath away. My first visit. Ancient giant granite cliffs. Snow-covered meadows. Ice weighing down the pine needles. The rush of the waterfalls breaking the silent air. I am already planning my second visit.

Ice crystals on glass
Ice crystals form on the car window in the early morning Tuesday in Yosemite National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Two small icicles dangle from a moss-covered rock.
Two small icicles dangle from a moss-covered rock in Grant Grove in Kings Canyon National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

And lastly, a brief stop to photograph trees affected by the Caldor fire near Martin Meadows, about 35 miles south of Lake Tahoe. The Caldor fire burned 221,835 acres in the fall of 2021. Recent storms have dropped multiple feet of snow, with more on the way.

My spirit feels rejuvenated having a few days void of focusing on COVID-19.

During winter’s solstice, I took the long drive home through fog on icy roads. It gave me time to reflect on the impermanence of life, the inevitability of death and the continuum of hope during my brief excursion from the city.

General Grant is about 3,000 years old. El Capitan in Yosemite Valley was formed roughly 200 million years ago. And one day children will again play in the forests scarred by fire. We will get past the pandemic in time. And I felt at peace having spent time in nature.

"In every walk with Nature, one receives far more than he seeks." — John Muir

The crowded trunks of small trees blackened by fire rise from snowy ground.
Trees burned by the Caldor fire stand near Martin Meadows off California Highway 88 between the Silver Lake and Kirkwood Mountain resorts. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
A small copse of bare decidious trees is backdropped by taller confiers and a snowy granite slope.
A small copse of bare decidious trees is backdropped by taller confiers and a snowy granite slope. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
A bare, brown granite formation constrasts with more-distant snowy mountains.
El Capitan and Half Dome, as seen from Tunnel View in Yosemite National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
A waterfall plummets down a granite prominence marked by patches of snow and ice.
Upper Yosemite Fall plummets among patches of snow and ice in Yosemite Valley. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Delicate ice crystals cling to a tree's needles.
Ice crystals cover trees in between winter storms in Yosemite National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
A man and two children walk a snow-covered trail lined by evergreens.
Martin Tschopp, left, walks with his children Kai, 12, middle, and Maia, 10, in Grant Grove in Kings Canyon National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Two boys, one seated and another on his belly, ride sleds on packed snow.
Cesar Torres, 8, of Madera, front, and Adrian Jovani Castillo, 11, have a blast sledding near an old burn area not far from the entrance of Yosemite National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
A large granite prominence towers behind sparse conifers lining a stream with snowy banks.
El Capitan rises above Yosemite Valley. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Snow clings to the steep granite rock walls of El Capitan.
Snow clings to the steep granite rock walls of El Capitan. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Clumps of snow top the stubs of blackened trees.
Clumps of snow top the stubs of blackened trees in Yosemite Valley. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Bare tree trunks glow in fading light.
As the sun sets, the light shifts red momentarily on trees with old burn marks not far from an entrance gate at Yosemite National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
Light shines from a small, many-windowed building with a steeple flanked by evergreens under a night sky.
Light shines from the Yosemite Chapel at night in Yosemite National Park. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.